Selena Britzius-Negash, LegalProgram Director of the Immigrant Law Center, discusses relevant issues and struggles in immigration law in the Twin Cities. View the training materials here: http://callforjustice.org/legal-referral-training-materials/
Facebook: http://ow.ly/x1r6k
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Call4JusticeLLC
Donate Today: http://ow.ly/z3uAt
Explanatory NoticeThe following video documents a training session on immigration law that took place on February 15, 2013 in Bloomington, Minnesota. The training was arranged by Call for Justice, LLC, a Twin Cities-based non-profit that works to connect low and moderate-income people with legal resources. Part of our work is to train United Way 2-1-1 on the various Twin Cities legal resources.
Selena Britzius-Negash, Program Director at the Immigrant Law Center of Minnesota, conducted the training. Ellen Krug, Executive Director of Call for Justice, LLC, coordinated the session. The training session was presented to Information and ReferralSpecialists and other employees of United Way 2-1-1.
The information contained in this video is not legal advice. Viewers seeking legal assistance should contact an attorney. If you are a Minnesota resident in need of legal assistance because of an immigration law issue and unable to afford an attorney, you should call United Way 2-1-1 by dialing 2-1-1.
At various places in the video, there may be references to “Zoey” or “Zoey Zalopa.” This is a fictional character used for purposes of exemplifying referrals to various legal resources.

Is This A BetterImmigrationSystem? http://testu.be/1lT4Uhk
Why US Work Visas Are So Controversial http://testu.be/1HXGayK
Subscribe! http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
The U.S. is one of the most visited places on earth, but has very complicated immigration laws. So just how difficult is it to enter the US?
Learn More:
US visas get new scrutiny after California, Paris attacks
http://bigstory.ap.org/article/41707308daa642649eb14a5283d6473a/us-visas-get-new-scrutiny-after-california-paris-attacks
"Visas used by foreigners to travel to the United States are getting new scrutiny in the wake of shooting massacres in California and France."
Directory of VisaCategories
http://travel.state.gov/content/visas/en/general/all-visa-categories.html
"The purpose of your intended travel and other facts will determine what type of visa is required under U.S. immigration law."
Why Narendra Modi Was Banned From the U.S.
http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052702303380004579520041301275638
"Narendra Modi is the only person ever denied a U.S. visa based on a little-known law on religious freedom."
MusicTrack Courtesy of APM Music:
Subscribe to TestTube News!
http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
_________________________
TestTube News is committed to answering the smart, inquisitive questions we have about life, society, politics and anything else happening in the news. It's a place where curiosity rules and together we'll get a clearer understanding of this crazy world we live in.
Watch more TestTube: http://testtube.com/testtubenews
TestTube now has a newsletter! Get a weekly round-up of our most popular videos across all the shows we make here at TestTube. For more info and to sign-up, click here. http://testtube.com/fwd
Subscribe now! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=testtubenetwork
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Download the New TestTube iOS app! http://testu.be/1ndmmMq
Special thanks to Jules Suzdaltsev for hosting TestTube!
Check Jules out on Twitter: https://twitter.com/jules_su

published:11 Dec 2015

views:341442

In order to become an immigration lawyer, a person must graduate from a four-year university or college, make a satisfactory grade on the LSAT and enroll in law school. Find out how to pass the bar examination and become an immigration lawyer with tips from a certified civil mediator in this free video on immigration law.
Expert: Robert M. ToddContact: www.wearehdtv.com
Bio: Robert Todd is the managing partner and president of Robert M. Todd, P.A. and Family Law Solutions.
Filmmaker: Christopher Rokosz

http://jdcareersoutthere.com/help-the-tired-poor-huddled-masses-as-an-immigration-lawyer/ Immigration law jobs come in a few varieties, as immigration lawyer Christina Lee tells us in this interview exploring careers for lawyers. Being a lawyer practicing immigration law can involve working with employers on employment-based immigration issues or working with families on removal defense and family-based immigration law issues.
Christina's law practice involves both aspects of immigration law, although she tells us that it's common to practice in one area or the other. This video explores law jobs focused on removal defense and family-based immigration law. Christina explains that
these law jobs are part counseling (petitioning to help families come to or stay in the United States) and part litigation careers (since removal defense involves going to court and fighting to help clients stay in the United States).
Whether you're in law school, wondering whether you should go to law school or exploring jobs to do with a law degree, you may want to check out immigration law jobs. In the full interview at JDCOT, Christina tells host Marc Luber why immigration law is a rewarding path, how to break in to immigration law jobs and explains a typical day, what skills and personality types best fit these careers for lawyers, and how to succeed.
Visit us at: http://JDCareersOutThere.com
99 ThingsTo Do With A Law Degree (eBook): http://bit.ly/jd99things
JDCOT on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/JDCOT
JDCOT on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/JD_COT
JDCOT on Google+:http://bit.ly/JDCOTgplus
JDCOT on LinkedIn: http://ow.ly/hawCx

What does an immigrant need to know if they've come into contact with law enforcement? Hi, I'm Jim Hacking, immigration attorney here in St. Louis Missouri. You know, we don't do a lot of criminal law here at the Hacking Law Practice, but I was in criminal court yesterday and I was watching a judge take a series of guilty pleas to various misdemeanors. In this case, it was a case that I was assigned to by the court, so I had to appear and I didn't work out a favorable result for my client. While I was sitting there, it occurred to me that many times, immigrants find themselves in those same situations. They can be misdemeanors or felonies, and one of the main mistakes that people make, we talk about this all the time, is when an immigrant comes into contact with law enforcement, what should they do? The first thing they should do is call an immigration attorney. The second thing they should do is call a criminal defense attorney, and here's why: the law is fundamentally different for immigrants who get into trouble with the law than it is for people who are US citizens. If you're not a US citizen, you do not have the same protection as everybody else, and there are many crimes that while they would not cause serious consequences to a non-immigrant, that is if the person's a citizen, they're going to not get into much trouble, for non-citizens, for immigrants, they can cause huge problems. What am I talking about? One of the things we hear a lot of at our office is an immigrant who has found themselves in trouble with the law, and they get a criminal defense attorney or no criminal defense attorney at all and they think that because the laws are such that there's no jail time as a result of this particular criminal activity, that means everything's going to be okay. The problem is that the ImmigrationService and the Department of Homeland Security treat many convictions differently than they do for regular citizens, in that you can have a situation where you plead guilty, you don't get any jail time, and in fact, the judge enters what's called the suspended imposition of sentence or gives some modified relief where you're sentenced, but you don't have to immediately go to jail. You're put on probation, and in those situations, it's great from a jail and state law standpoint, but from an immigration standpoint, it can be a conviction, and that conviction can render you deportable. That's true even if you have your green card. I can't stress it enough. If you're not a US citizen, you're not like everybody else, and you are subject to deportation if you entered guilty pleas on certain crimes. To quote Donald Rumsfeld, the former Secretary of Defense, "You don't know what you don't know.", and that's something that's very, very true. Many criminal defense attorneys find themselves jammed up because they have entered their client into a plea that renders them deportable and the criminal defense attorney never even knew it. We take each one of these situations from scratch. The law is so complicated that we don't ever give off-the-cuff recommendations as to the immigration consequences of a plea. It's so complex that we always start at the very beginning. You have to look at the statute that the person is charged with. You have to look at the Immigration and Nationality Act, which are the laws and regulations that govern these types of convictions, and you have to do a walkthrough of each of the little wrongs of each of the statutes to see if in this particular case, the person's going to be rendered deportable or subject to being placed in deportation proceedings. One thing you need to keep in mind is that ICE will put people into deportation proceedings even if there's a way for them to get out, so you don't want to ever trigger that. You don't ever want to make the mistake of just entering into a guilty plea, so if you're talking to a criminal defense attorney or if you've been charged and you're hearing things like probation, no problem, suspended sentence, these are the kind of buzzwords that you need to say to yourself, "Woah, that immigration attorney Jim Hacking told me once on a video that if I start hearing those kinds of words, that I really need to be careful." We have a lot of friends in the criminal defense bar, and we are happy to sit down and consult with them. The smart ones always call us or another immigration attorney to make sure that their client is protected. Every attorney has a duty to protect their client from immigration consequences and we've seen time and time again where that just hasn't happened. Yo

published:12 Mar 2014

views:913

****FREE OFFICE CONSULTATION****
Call now to speak with an Immigration lawyer 2125719200
Or learn more on www.DrImmigration.com
Feiner & Lavy P.C., Attorneys at Law, provides legal immigration services to individuals and employers looking to obtain work visas, work authorizations, permanent residence, and U.S. citizenship.

published:14 Jul 2016

views:1904

Learn about recent Supreme Court decision regarding spouse earnings to complete required application that qualifies under current immigration rules. Can you provide income from 3rd party to prove your earnings? Are there any exceptions to the £18.600 minimum earnings rule?

Immigration law

Immigration law refers to national government policies which control the phenomenon of immigration to their country

Immigration law, regarding foreign citizens, is related to nationality law, which governs the legal status of people, in matters such as citizenship. Immigration laws vary from country to country, as well as according to the political climate of the times, as sentiments may sway from the widely inclusive to the deeply exclusive of new immigrants.

Immigration law regarding the citizens of a country is regulated by international law. The United Nations International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights mandates that all countries allow entry to its own citizens.

Certain countries may maintain rather strict laws which regulate both the right of entry and internal rights, such as the duration of stay and the right to participate in government. Most countries have laws which designate a process for naturalization, by which immigrants may become citizens.

When people cross national borders during their migration, they are called migrants or immigrants (from Latin: migrare, wanderer) from the perspective of the country which they enter. From the perspective of the country which they leave, they are called emigrant or outmigrant.Sociology designates immigration usually as migration (as well as emigration accordingly outward migration).

International human rights law

International human rights law is the body of international law designed to promote and protect human rights at the international, regional, and domestic levels. As a form of international law, international human rights law is primarily made up of treaties, agreements between states intended to have binding legal effect between the parties that have agreed to them; and customary international law, rules of law derived from the consistent conduct of states acting out of the belief that the law required them to act that way. Other international human rights instruments while not legally binding contribute to the implementation, understanding and development of international human rights law and have been recognised as a source of political obligation.

Enforcement of international human rights law can occur on either a domestic, a regional or an international level. States that ratify human rights treaties commit themselves to respecting those rights and ensuring that their domestic law is compatible with international legislation. When domestic law fails to provide a remedy for human rights abuses, parties may be able to resort to regional or international mechanisms for enforcing human rights.

Human rights

Human rights are moral principles or norms, that describe certain standards of human behavior, and are regularly protected as legal rights in municipal and international law. They are commonly understood as inalienable fundamental rights "to which a person is inherently entitled simply because she or he is a human being," and which are "inherent in all human beings" regardless of their nation, location, language, religion, ethnic origin or any other status. They are applicable everywhere and at every time in the sense of being universal, and they are egalitarian in the sense of being the same for everyone. They require empathy and the rule of law and impose an obligation on persons to respect the human rights of others. They should not be taken away except as a result of due process based on specific circumstances; for example, human rights may include freedom from unlawful imprisonment, torture, and execution.

Immigration Law

Selena Britzius-Negash, LegalProgram Director of the Immigrant Law Center, discusses relevant issues and struggles in immigration law in the Twin Cities. View the training materials here: http://callforjustice.org/legal-referral-training-materials/
Facebook: http://ow.ly/x1r6k
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Call4JusticeLLC
Donate Today: http://ow.ly/z3uAt
Explanatory NoticeThe following video documents a training session on immigration law that took place on February 15, 2013 in Bloomington, Minnesota. The training was arranged by Call for Justice, LLC, a Twin Cities-based non-profit that works to connect low and moderate-income people with legal resources. Part of our work is to train United Way 2-1-1 on the various Twin Cities legal resources.
Selena Britzius-Negash, Program Director at the Immigrant Law Center of Minnesota, conducted the training. Ellen Krug, Executive Director of Call for Justice, LLC, coordinated the session. The training session was presented to Information and ReferralSpecialists and other employees of United Way 2-1-1.
The information contained in this video is not legal advice. Viewers seeking legal assistance should contact an attorney. If you are a Minnesota resident in need of legal assistance because of an immigration law issue and unable to afford an attorney, you should call United Way 2-1-1 by dialing 2-1-1.
At various places in the video, there may be references to “Zoey” or “Zoey Zalopa.” This is a fictional character used for purposes of exemplifying referrals to various legal resources.

How Hard Is It To Legally Enter The U.S.?

Is This A BetterImmigrationSystem? http://testu.be/1lT4Uhk
Why US Work Visas Are So Controversial http://testu.be/1HXGayK
Subscribe! http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
The U.S. is one of the most visited places on earth, but has very complicated immigration laws. So just how difficult is it to enter the US?
Learn More:
US visas get new scrutiny after California, Paris attacks
http://bigstory.ap.org/article/41707308daa642649eb14a5283d6473a/us-visas-get-new-scrutiny-after-california-paris-attacks
"Visas used by foreigners to travel to the United States are getting new scrutiny in the wake of shooting massacres in California and France."
Directory of VisaCategories
http://travel.state.gov/content/visas/en/general/all-visa-categories.html
"The purpose of your intended travel and other facts will determine what type of visa is required under U.S. immigration law."
Why Narendra Modi Was Banned From the U.S.
http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052702303380004579520041301275638
"Narendra Modi is the only person ever denied a U.S. visa based on a little-known law on religious freedom."
MusicTrack Courtesy of APM Music:
Subscribe to TestTube News!
http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
_________________________
TestTube News is committed to answering the smart, inquisitive questions we have about life, society, politics and anything else happening in the news. It's a place where curiosity rules and together we'll get a clearer understanding of this crazy world we live in.
Watch more TestTube: http://testtube.com/testtubenews
TestTube now has a newsletter! Get a weekly round-up of our most popular videos across all the shows we make here at TestTube. For more info and to sign-up, click here. http://testtube.com/fwd
Subscribe now! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=testtubenetwork
TestTube on Twitter https://twitter.com/TestTube
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TestTube on Facebook https://facebook.com/testtubenetwork
TestTube on Google+ http://gplus.to/TestTube
Download the New TestTube iOS app! http://testu.be/1ndmmMq
Special thanks to Jules Suzdaltsev for hosting TestTube!
Check Jules out on Twitter: https://twitter.com/jules_su

1:37

U.S. Immigration Law : How to Become an Immigration Lawyer

U.S. Immigration Law : How to Become an Immigration Lawyer

U.S. Immigration Law : How to Become an Immigration Lawyer

In order to become an immigration lawyer, a person must graduate from a four-year university or college, make a satisfactory grade on the LSAT and enroll in law school. Find out how to pass the bar examination and become an immigration lawyer with tips from a certified civil mediator in this free video on immigration law.
Expert: Robert M. ToddContact: www.wearehdtv.com
Bio: Robert Todd is the managing partner and president of Robert M. Todd, P.A. and Family Law Solutions.
Filmmaker: Christopher Rokosz

Immigration Law Jobs - Being An Immigration Lawyer

http://jdcareersoutthere.com/help-the-tired-poor-huddled-masses-as-an-immigration-lawyer/ Immigration law jobs come in a few varieties, as immigration lawyer Christina Lee tells us in this interview exploring careers for lawyers. Being a lawyer practicing immigration law can involve working with employers on employment-based immigration issues or working with families on removal defense and family-based immigration law issues.
Christina's law practice involves both aspects of immigration law, although she tells us that it's common to practice in one area or the other. This video explores law jobs focused on removal defense and family-based immigration law. Christina explains that
these law jobs are part counseling (petitioning to help families come to or stay in the United States) and part litigation careers (since removal defense involves going to court and fighting to help clients stay in the United States).
Whether you're in law school, wondering whether you should go to law school or exploring jobs to do with a law degree, you may want to check out immigration law jobs. In the full interview at JDCOT, Christina tells host Marc Luber why immigration law is a rewarding path, how to break in to immigration law jobs and explains a typical day, what skills and personality types best fit these careers for lawyers, and how to succeed.
Visit us at: http://JDCareersOutThere.com
99 ThingsTo Do With A Law Degree (eBook): http://bit.ly/jd99things
JDCOT on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/JDCOT
JDCOT on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/JD_COT
JDCOT on Google+:http://bit.ly/JDCOTgplus
JDCOT on LinkedIn: http://ow.ly/hawCx

When criminal law and immigration law collide

What does an immigrant need to know if they've come into contact with law enforcement? Hi, I'm Jim Hacking, immigration attorney here in St. Louis Missouri. You know, we don't do a lot of criminal law here at the Hacking Law Practice, but I was in criminal court yesterday and I was watching a judge take a series of guilty pleas to various misdemeanors. In this case, it was a case that I was assigned to by the court, so I had to appear and I didn't work out a favorable result for my client. While I was sitting there, it occurred to me that many times, immigrants find themselves in those same situations. They can be misdemeanors or felonies, and one of the main mistakes that people make, we talk about this all the time, is when an immigrant comes into contact with law enforcement, what should they do? The first thing they should do is call an immigration attorney. The second thing they should do is call a criminal defense attorney, and here's why: the law is fundamentally different for immigrants who get into trouble with the law than it is for people who are US citizens. If you're not a US citizen, you do not have the same protection as everybody else, and there are many crimes that while they would not cause serious consequences to a non-immigrant, that is if the person's a citizen, they're going to not get into much trouble, for non-citizens, for immigrants, they can cause huge problems. What am I talking about? One of the things we hear a lot of at our office is an immigrant who has found themselves in trouble with the law, and they get a criminal defense attorney or no criminal defense attorney at all and they think that because the laws are such that there's no jail time as a result of this particular criminal activity, that means everything's going to be okay. The problem is that the ImmigrationService and the Department of Homeland Security treat many convictions differently than they do for regular citizens, in that you can have a situation where you plead guilty, you don't get any jail time, and in fact, the judge enters what's called the suspended imposition of sentence or gives some modified relief where you're sentenced, but you don't have to immediately go to jail. You're put on probation, and in those situations, it's great from a jail and state law standpoint, but from an immigration standpoint, it can be a conviction, and that conviction can render you deportable. That's true even if you have your green card. I can't stress it enough. If you're not a US citizen, you're not like everybody else, and you are subject to deportation if you entered guilty pleas on certain crimes. To quote Donald Rumsfeld, the former Secretary of Defense, "You don't know what you don't know.", and that's something that's very, very true. Many criminal defense attorneys find themselves jammed up because they have entered their client into a plea that renders them deportable and the criminal defense attorney never even knew it. We take each one of these situations from scratch. The law is so complicated that we don't ever give off-the-cuff recommendations as to the immigration consequences of a plea. It's so complex that we always start at the very beginning. You have to look at the statute that the person is charged with. You have to look at the Immigration and Nationality Act, which are the laws and regulations that govern these types of convictions, and you have to do a walkthrough of each of the little wrongs of each of the statutes to see if in this particular case, the person's going to be rendered deportable or subject to being placed in deportation proceedings. One thing you need to keep in mind is that ICE will put people into deportation proceedings even if there's a way for them to get out, so you don't want to ever trigger that. You don't ever want to make the mistake of just entering into a guilty plea, so if you're talking to a criminal defense attorney or if you've been charged and you're hearing things like probation, no problem, suspended sentence, these are the kind of buzzwords that you need to say to yourself, "Woah, that immigration attorney Jim Hacking told me once on a video that if I start hearing those kinds of words, that I really need to be careful." We have a lot of friends in the criminal defense bar, and we are happy to sit down and consult with them. The smart ones always call us or another immigration attorney to make sure that their client is protected. Every attorney has a duty to protect their client from immigration consequences and we've seen time and time again where that just hasn't happened. Yo

1:55

New York Immigration Lawyers | Immigration Law Firm NY

New York Immigration Lawyers | Immigration Law Firm NY

New York Immigration Lawyers | Immigration Law Firm NY

****FREE OFFICE CONSULTATION****
Call now to speak with an Immigration lawyer 2125719200
Or learn more on www.DrImmigration.com
Feiner & Lavy P.C., Attorneys at Law, provides legal immigration services to individuals and employers looking to obtain work visas, work authorizations, permanent residence, and U.S. citizenship.

4:55

Latifsolicitors.co.uk - Recent Financial changes to Immigration Law for Spouses

Latifsolicitors.co.uk - Recent Financial changes to Immigration Law for Spouses

Latifsolicitors.co.uk - Recent Financial changes to Immigration Law for Spouses

Learn about recent Supreme Court decision regarding spouse earnings to complete required application that qualifies under current immigration rules. Can you provide income from 3rd party to prove your earnings? Are there any exceptions to the £18.600 minimum earnings rule?

http://www.hykellaw.com/practice-areas/
Immigration & Family LawAttorney in PhiladelphiaNeed a qualified legal professional to handle your personal & business immigration requirements or family’s legal matters?
Hykel Law goes above and beyond to provide experienced legal counsel to businesses and families.
Spearheaded by an experienced Immigration and Family Law Attorney, Renee Hykel Cuddy, our personalized, no-nonsense approach to Immigration Law, Citizenship & Naturalization, Family & Relationship, and Business Immigration legal matters yields the best results.
As part of our Immigration Law service, we expertly cover:
- FamilyBased Immigration
- Marriage/Fiancé Visas
- Asylum
- VAWA Immigration
- Immigration Reform
- Immigration Appeals & Litigation
- DACALawyer
- Visitor/Tourist Visas
- Same Sex Immigration Issues
- Deportation/RemovalDefense, and
- Immigration Waivers
In addition to specialized Citizenship & Naturalization legal services, we offer Family Law services that cover Divorce and Custody, while our Business Immigration service covers:
- Work Visas
- Employment Based Green Cards
- PERM Lawyer, and
- Investor Visas
Hykel Law understands that your family’s primary goal is to stay together, which is why our sympathetic immigration legal service goes the extra mile to get your case approved as quickly as possible. We also understand that in their greatest time of need, clients still require premium results at the lowest rates. We keep cost-effectiveness and quality of service in mind, while striving to deliver premium results.
Armed with experience in handling compliance, documentation, lawful entry of foreign nationals, work permits and much more, Hykel Law works quickly and efficiently to resolve your corporate immigration issues.
For premium quality, results-oriented and cost-effective legal counsel in Immigration Law, Citizenship & Naturalization, Business Immigration Law, and Family Law, call Hykel Law now on 215-246-9400, or visit http://www.hykellaw.com/

44:28

Immigration Law Updates March 3 2017

Immigration Law Updates March 3 2017

Immigration Law Updates March 3 2017

http://peerallylaw.com
info@peerallylaw.com
Phone (510) 7425887
Information provided are for educational purposes only. You should not act or refrain to act, solely on the information provided. No attorney-client relationship is created by this video. Attorney reserves the right to refuse the case. If you have any questions, feel free to call (510) 742 5887

Devisers is a leading immigration law firm

We are available to advice and guide our clients throughout the process of immigration law. We have the team of dedicated professionals working in their field of expertise with positive attitude. We take great pride in our staff and have a wonderful team of counselors and professionals working for us. Our counselors are trained and have to meet the benchmarks set by the organization to ensure that they provide the best advice to our clients.
We are aware of the variety of different circumstances and requirements that benefits an individual or corporate clients, this unrivaled understanding helps us in helping you in every aspect of your inquiry. Our Mission is to provide outstanding quality service which is efficient and cost effective that helps us to delight our clients.

2:18

Fear in Argentina over immigration law changes

Fear in Argentina over immigration law changes

Fear in Argentina over immigration law changes

Recent changes to immigration law in Argentina have taken foreign communities by surprise and left them worrying about their future.
The government is tightening border controls, which it says are needed for security measures.
Al Jazeera'sDaniel Schweimler reports from Buenos Aires.
- Subscribe to our channel: http://aje.io/AJSubscribe
- Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
- Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
- Check our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

Immigration Law

Selena Britzius-Negash, LegalProgram Director of the Immigrant Law Center, discusses relevant issues and struggles in immigration law in the Twin Cities. View the training materials here: http://callforjustice.org/legal-referral-training-materials/
Facebook: http://ow.ly/x1r6k
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Call4JusticeLLC
Donate Today: http://ow.ly/z3uAt
Explanatory NoticeThe following video documents a training session on immigration law that took place on February 15, 2013 in Bloomington, Minnesota. The training was arranged by Call for Justice, LLC, a Twin Cities-based non-profit that works to connect low and moderate-income people with legal resources. Part of our work is to train United Way 2-1-1 on the various Twin Cities legal resources.
Selena Britzius-Negash, Program Directo...

How Hard Is It To Legally Enter The U.S.?

Is This A BetterImmigrationSystem? http://testu.be/1lT4Uhk
Why US Work Visas Are So Controversial http://testu.be/1HXGayK
Subscribe! http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
The U.S. is one of the most visited places on earth, but has very complicated immigration laws. So just how difficult is it to enter the US?
Learn More:
US visas get new scrutiny after California, Paris attacks
http://bigstory.ap.org/article/41707308daa642649eb14a5283d6473a/us-visas-get-new-scrutiny-after-california-paris-attacks
"Visas used by foreigners to travel to the United States are getting new scrutiny in the wake of shooting massacres in California and France."
Directory of VisaCategories
http://travel.state.gov/content/visas/en/general/all-visa-categories.html
"The purpose of your intended travel and other facts wi...

published: 11 Dec 2015

U.S. Immigration Law : How to Become an Immigration Lawyer

In order to become an immigration lawyer, a person must graduate from a four-year university or college, make a satisfactory grade on the LSAT and enroll in law school. Find out how to pass the bar examination and become an immigration lawyer with tips from a certified civil mediator in this free video on immigration law.
Expert: Robert M. ToddContact: www.wearehdtv.com
Bio: Robert Todd is the managing partner and president of Robert M. Todd, P.A. and Family Law Solutions.
Filmmaker: Christopher Rokosz

Immigration Law Jobs - Being An Immigration Lawyer

http://jdcareersoutthere.com/help-the-tired-poor-huddled-masses-as-an-immigration-lawyer/ Immigration law jobs come in a few varieties, as immigration lawyer Christina Lee tells us in this interview exploring careers for lawyers. Being a lawyer practicing immigration law can involve working with employers on employment-based immigration issues or working with families on removal defense and family-based immigration law issues.
Christina's law practice involves both aspects of immigration law, although she tells us that it's common to practice in one area or the other. This video explores law jobs focused on removal defense and family-based immigration law. Christina explains that
these law jobs are part counseling (petitioning to help families come to or stay in the United States) and ...

Immigration Law Paralegal

When criminal law and immigration law collide

What does an immigrant need to know if they've come into contact with law enforcement? Hi, I'm Jim Hacking, immigration attorney here in St. Louis Missouri. You know, we don't do a lot of criminal law here at the Hacking Law Practice, but I was in criminal court yesterday and I was watching a judge take a series of guilty pleas to various misdemeanors. In this case, it was a case that I was assigned to by the court, so I had to appear and I didn't work out a favorable result for my client. While I was sitting there, it occurred to me that many times, immigrants find themselves in those same situations. They can be misdemeanors or felonies, and one of the main mistakes that people make, we talk about this all the time, is when an immigrant comes into contact with law enforcement, what shoul...

published: 12 Mar 2014

New York Immigration Lawyers | Immigration Law Firm NY

****FREE OFFICE CONSULTATION****
Call now to speak with an Immigration lawyer 2125719200
Or learn more on www.DrImmigration.com
Feiner & Lavy P.C., Attorneys at Law, provides legal immigration services to individuals and employers looking to obtain work visas, work authorizations, permanent residence, and U.S. citizenship.

published: 14 Jul 2016

Latifsolicitors.co.uk - Recent Financial changes to Immigration Law for Spouses

Learn about recent Supreme Court decision regarding spouse earnings to complete required application that qualifies under current immigration rules. Can you provide income from 3rd party to prove your earnings? Are there any exceptions to the £18.600 minimum earnings rule?

Immigration Law Updates March 3 2017

http://peerallylaw.com
info@peerallylaw.com
Phone (510) 7425887
Information provided are for educational purposes only. You should not act or refrain to act, solely on the information provided. No attorney-client relationship is created by this video. Attorney reserves the right to refuse the case. If you have any questions, feel free to call (510) 742 5887

Devisers is a leading immigration law firm

We are available to advice and guide our clients throughout the process of immigration law. We have the team of dedicated professionals working in their field of expertise with positive attitude. We take great pride in our staff and have a wonderful team of counselors and professionals working for us. Our counselors are trained and have to meet the benchmarks set by the organization to ensure that they provide the best advice to our clients.
We are aware of the variety of different circumstances and requirements that benefits an individual or corporate clients, this unrivaled understanding helps us in helping you in every aspect of your inquiry. Our Mission is to provide outstanding quality service which is efficient and cost effective that helps us to delight our clients.

published: 20 Mar 2017

Fear in Argentina over immigration law changes

Recent changes to immigration law in Argentina have taken foreign communities by surprise and left them worrying about their future.
The government is tightening border controls, which it says are needed for security measures.
Al Jazeera'sDaniel Schweimler reports from Buenos Aires.
- Subscribe to our channel: http://aje.io/AJSubscribe
- Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
- Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
- Check our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

Selena Britzius-Negash, LegalProgram Director of the Immigrant Law Center, discusses relevant issues and struggles in immigration law in the Twin Cities. View the training materials here: http://callforjustice.org/legal-referral-training-materials/
Facebook: http://ow.ly/x1r6k
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Call4JusticeLLC
Donate Today: http://ow.ly/z3uAt
Explanatory NoticeThe following video documents a training session on immigration law that took place on February 15, 2013 in Bloomington, Minnesota. The training was arranged by Call for Justice, LLC, a Twin Cities-based non-profit that works to connect low and moderate-income people with legal resources. Part of our work is to train United Way 2-1-1 on the various Twin Cities legal resources.
Selena Britzius-Negash, Program Director at the Immigrant Law Center of Minnesota, conducted the training. Ellen Krug, Executive Director of Call for Justice, LLC, coordinated the session. The training session was presented to Information and ReferralSpecialists and other employees of United Way 2-1-1.
The information contained in this video is not legal advice. Viewers seeking legal assistance should contact an attorney. If you are a Minnesota resident in need of legal assistance because of an immigration law issue and unable to afford an attorney, you should call United Way 2-1-1 by dialing 2-1-1.
At various places in the video, there may be references to “Zoey” or “Zoey Zalopa.” This is a fictional character used for purposes of exemplifying referrals to various legal resources.

Selena Britzius-Negash, LegalProgram Director of the Immigrant Law Center, discusses relevant issues and struggles in immigration law in the Twin Cities. View the training materials here: http://callforjustice.org/legal-referral-training-materials/
Facebook: http://ow.ly/x1r6k
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Call4JusticeLLC
Donate Today: http://ow.ly/z3uAt
Explanatory NoticeThe following video documents a training session on immigration law that took place on February 15, 2013 in Bloomington, Minnesota. The training was arranged by Call for Justice, LLC, a Twin Cities-based non-profit that works to connect low and moderate-income people with legal resources. Part of our work is to train United Way 2-1-1 on the various Twin Cities legal resources.
Selena Britzius-Negash, Program Director at the Immigrant Law Center of Minnesota, conducted the training. Ellen Krug, Executive Director of Call for Justice, LLC, coordinated the session. The training session was presented to Information and ReferralSpecialists and other employees of United Way 2-1-1.
The information contained in this video is not legal advice. Viewers seeking legal assistance should contact an attorney. If you are a Minnesota resident in need of legal assistance because of an immigration law issue and unable to afford an attorney, you should call United Way 2-1-1 by dialing 2-1-1.
At various places in the video, there may be references to “Zoey” or “Zoey Zalopa.” This is a fictional character used for purposes of exemplifying referrals to various legal resources.

Is This A BetterImmigrationSystem? http://testu.be/1lT4Uhk
Why US Work Visas Are So Controversial http://testu.be/1HXGayK
Subscribe! http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
The U.S. is one of the most visited places on earth, but has very complicated immigration laws. So just how difficult is it to enter the US?
Learn More:
US visas get new scrutiny after California, Paris attacks
http://bigstory.ap.org/article/41707308daa642649eb14a5283d6473a/us-visas-get-new-scrutiny-after-california-paris-attacks
"Visas used by foreigners to travel to the United States are getting new scrutiny in the wake of shooting massacres in California and France."
Directory of VisaCategories
http://travel.state.gov/content/visas/en/general/all-visa-categories.html
"The purpose of your intended travel and other facts will determine what type of visa is required under U.S. immigration law."
Why Narendra Modi Was Banned From the U.S.
http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052702303380004579520041301275638
"Narendra Modi is the only person ever denied a U.S. visa based on a little-known law on religious freedom."
MusicTrack Courtesy of APM Music:
Subscribe to TestTube News!
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_________________________
TestTube News is committed to answering the smart, inquisitive questions we have about life, society, politics and anything else happening in the news. It's a place where curiosity rules and together we'll get a clearer understanding of this crazy world we live in.
Watch more TestTube: http://testtube.com/testtubenews
TestTube now has a newsletter! Get a weekly round-up of our most popular videos across all the shows we make here at TestTube. For more info and to sign-up, click here. http://testtube.com/fwd
Subscribe now! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=testtubenetwork
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Download the New TestTube iOS app! http://testu.be/1ndmmMq
Special thanks to Jules Suzdaltsev for hosting TestTube!
Check Jules out on Twitter: https://twitter.com/jules_su

Is This A BetterImmigrationSystem? http://testu.be/1lT4Uhk
Why US Work Visas Are So Controversial http://testu.be/1HXGayK
Subscribe! http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
The U.S. is one of the most visited places on earth, but has very complicated immigration laws. So just how difficult is it to enter the US?
Learn More:
US visas get new scrutiny after California, Paris attacks
http://bigstory.ap.org/article/41707308daa642649eb14a5283d6473a/us-visas-get-new-scrutiny-after-california-paris-attacks
"Visas used by foreigners to travel to the United States are getting new scrutiny in the wake of shooting massacres in California and France."
Directory of VisaCategories
http://travel.state.gov/content/visas/en/general/all-visa-categories.html
"The purpose of your intended travel and other facts will determine what type of visa is required under U.S. immigration law."
Why Narendra Modi Was Banned From the U.S.
http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052702303380004579520041301275638
"Narendra Modi is the only person ever denied a U.S. visa based on a little-known law on religious freedom."
MusicTrack Courtesy of APM Music:
Subscribe to TestTube News!
http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
_________________________
TestTube News is committed to answering the smart, inquisitive questions we have about life, society, politics and anything else happening in the news. It's a place where curiosity rules and together we'll get a clearer understanding of this crazy world we live in.
Watch more TestTube: http://testtube.com/testtubenews
TestTube now has a newsletter! Get a weekly round-up of our most popular videos across all the shows we make here at TestTube. For more info and to sign-up, click here. http://testtube.com/fwd
Subscribe now! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=testtubenetwork
TestTube on Twitter https://twitter.com/TestTube
Trace Dominguez on Twitter https://twitter.com/TraceDominguez
TestTube on Facebook https://facebook.com/testtubenetwork
TestTube on Google+ http://gplus.to/TestTube
Download the New TestTube iOS app! http://testu.be/1ndmmMq
Special thanks to Jules Suzdaltsev for hosting TestTube!
Check Jules out on Twitter: https://twitter.com/jules_su

U.S. Immigration Law : How to Become an Immigration Lawyer

In order to become an immigration lawyer, a person must graduate from a four-year university or college, make a satisfactory grade on the LSAT and enroll in law...

In order to become an immigration lawyer, a person must graduate from a four-year university or college, make a satisfactory grade on the LSAT and enroll in law school. Find out how to pass the bar examination and become an immigration lawyer with tips from a certified civil mediator in this free video on immigration law.
Expert: Robert M. ToddContact: www.wearehdtv.com
Bio: Robert Todd is the managing partner and president of Robert M. Todd, P.A. and Family Law Solutions.
Filmmaker: Christopher Rokosz

In order to become an immigration lawyer, a person must graduate from a four-year university or college, make a satisfactory grade on the LSAT and enroll in law school. Find out how to pass the bar examination and become an immigration lawyer with tips from a certified civil mediator in this free video on immigration law.
Expert: Robert M. ToddContact: www.wearehdtv.com
Bio: Robert Todd is the managing partner and president of Robert M. Todd, P.A. and Family Law Solutions.
Filmmaker: Christopher Rokosz

Immigration Law Jobs - Being An Immigration Lawyer

http://jdcareersoutthere.com/help-the-tired-poor-huddled-masses-as-an-immigration-lawyer/ Immigration law jobs come in a few varieties, as immigration lawyer C...

http://jdcareersoutthere.com/help-the-tired-poor-huddled-masses-as-an-immigration-lawyer/ Immigration law jobs come in a few varieties, as immigration lawyer Christina Lee tells us in this interview exploring careers for lawyers. Being a lawyer practicing immigration law can involve working with employers on employment-based immigration issues or working with families on removal defense and family-based immigration law issues.
Christina's law practice involves both aspects of immigration law, although she tells us that it's common to practice in one area or the other. This video explores law jobs focused on removal defense and family-based immigration law. Christina explains that
these law jobs are part counseling (petitioning to help families come to or stay in the United States) and part litigation careers (since removal defense involves going to court and fighting to help clients stay in the United States).
Whether you're in law school, wondering whether you should go to law school or exploring jobs to do with a law degree, you may want to check out immigration law jobs. In the full interview at JDCOT, Christina tells host Marc Luber why immigration law is a rewarding path, how to break in to immigration law jobs and explains a typical day, what skills and personality types best fit these careers for lawyers, and how to succeed.
Visit us at: http://JDCareersOutThere.com
99 ThingsTo Do With A Law Degree (eBook): http://bit.ly/jd99things
JDCOT on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/JDCOT
JDCOT on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/JD_COT
JDCOT on Google+:http://bit.ly/JDCOTgplus
JDCOT on LinkedIn: http://ow.ly/hawCx

http://jdcareersoutthere.com/help-the-tired-poor-huddled-masses-as-an-immigration-lawyer/ Immigration law jobs come in a few varieties, as immigration lawyer Christina Lee tells us in this interview exploring careers for lawyers. Being a lawyer practicing immigration law can involve working with employers on employment-based immigration issues or working with families on removal defense and family-based immigration law issues.
Christina's law practice involves both aspects of immigration law, although she tells us that it's common to practice in one area or the other. This video explores law jobs focused on removal defense and family-based immigration law. Christina explains that
these law jobs are part counseling (petitioning to help families come to or stay in the United States) and part litigation careers (since removal defense involves going to court and fighting to help clients stay in the United States).
Whether you're in law school, wondering whether you should go to law school or exploring jobs to do with a law degree, you may want to check out immigration law jobs. In the full interview at JDCOT, Christina tells host Marc Luber why immigration law is a rewarding path, how to break in to immigration law jobs and explains a typical day, what skills and personality types best fit these careers for lawyers, and how to succeed.
Visit us at: http://JDCareersOutThere.com
99 ThingsTo Do With A Law Degree (eBook): http://bit.ly/jd99things
JDCOT on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/JDCOT
JDCOT on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/JD_COT
JDCOT on Google+:http://bit.ly/JDCOTgplus
JDCOT on LinkedIn: http://ow.ly/hawCx

When criminal law and immigration law collide

What does an immigrant need to know if they've come into contact with law enforcement? Hi, I'm Jim Hacking, immigration attorney here in St. Louis Missouri. You...

What does an immigrant need to know if they've come into contact with law enforcement? Hi, I'm Jim Hacking, immigration attorney here in St. Louis Missouri. You know, we don't do a lot of criminal law here at the Hacking Law Practice, but I was in criminal court yesterday and I was watching a judge take a series of guilty pleas to various misdemeanors. In this case, it was a case that I was assigned to by the court, so I had to appear and I didn't work out a favorable result for my client. While I was sitting there, it occurred to me that many times, immigrants find themselves in those same situations. They can be misdemeanors or felonies, and one of the main mistakes that people make, we talk about this all the time, is when an immigrant comes into contact with law enforcement, what should they do? The first thing they should do is call an immigration attorney. The second thing they should do is call a criminal defense attorney, and here's why: the law is fundamentally different for immigrants who get into trouble with the law than it is for people who are US citizens. If you're not a US citizen, you do not have the same protection as everybody else, and there are many crimes that while they would not cause serious consequences to a non-immigrant, that is if the person's a citizen, they're going to not get into much trouble, for non-citizens, for immigrants, they can cause huge problems. What am I talking about? One of the things we hear a lot of at our office is an immigrant who has found themselves in trouble with the law, and they get a criminal defense attorney or no criminal defense attorney at all and they think that because the laws are such that there's no jail time as a result of this particular criminal activity, that means everything's going to be okay. The problem is that the ImmigrationService and the Department of Homeland Security treat many convictions differently than they do for regular citizens, in that you can have a situation where you plead guilty, you don't get any jail time, and in fact, the judge enters what's called the suspended imposition of sentence or gives some modified relief where you're sentenced, but you don't have to immediately go to jail. You're put on probation, and in those situations, it's great from a jail and state law standpoint, but from an immigration standpoint, it can be a conviction, and that conviction can render you deportable. That's true even if you have your green card. I can't stress it enough. If you're not a US citizen, you're not like everybody else, and you are subject to deportation if you entered guilty pleas on certain crimes. To quote Donald Rumsfeld, the former Secretary of Defense, "You don't know what you don't know.", and that's something that's very, very true. Many criminal defense attorneys find themselves jammed up because they have entered their client into a plea that renders them deportable and the criminal defense attorney never even knew it. We take each one of these situations from scratch. The law is so complicated that we don't ever give off-the-cuff recommendations as to the immigration consequences of a plea. It's so complex that we always start at the very beginning. You have to look at the statute that the person is charged with. You have to look at the Immigration and Nationality Act, which are the laws and regulations that govern these types of convictions, and you have to do a walkthrough of each of the little wrongs of each of the statutes to see if in this particular case, the person's going to be rendered deportable or subject to being placed in deportation proceedings. One thing you need to keep in mind is that ICE will put people into deportation proceedings even if there's a way for them to get out, so you don't want to ever trigger that. You don't ever want to make the mistake of just entering into a guilty plea, so if you're talking to a criminal defense attorney or if you've been charged and you're hearing things like probation, no problem, suspended sentence, these are the kind of buzzwords that you need to say to yourself, "Woah, that immigration attorney Jim Hacking told me once on a video that if I start hearing those kinds of words, that I really need to be careful." We have a lot of friends in the criminal defense bar, and we are happy to sit down and consult with them. The smart ones always call us or another immigration attorney to make sure that their client is protected. Every attorney has a duty to protect their client from immigration consequences and we've seen time and time again where that just hasn't happened. Yo

What does an immigrant need to know if they've come into contact with law enforcement? Hi, I'm Jim Hacking, immigration attorney here in St. Louis Missouri. You know, we don't do a lot of criminal law here at the Hacking Law Practice, but I was in criminal court yesterday and I was watching a judge take a series of guilty pleas to various misdemeanors. In this case, it was a case that I was assigned to by the court, so I had to appear and I didn't work out a favorable result for my client. While I was sitting there, it occurred to me that many times, immigrants find themselves in those same situations. They can be misdemeanors or felonies, and one of the main mistakes that people make, we talk about this all the time, is when an immigrant comes into contact with law enforcement, what should they do? The first thing they should do is call an immigration attorney. The second thing they should do is call a criminal defense attorney, and here's why: the law is fundamentally different for immigrants who get into trouble with the law than it is for people who are US citizens. If you're not a US citizen, you do not have the same protection as everybody else, and there are many crimes that while they would not cause serious consequences to a non-immigrant, that is if the person's a citizen, they're going to not get into much trouble, for non-citizens, for immigrants, they can cause huge problems. What am I talking about? One of the things we hear a lot of at our office is an immigrant who has found themselves in trouble with the law, and they get a criminal defense attorney or no criminal defense attorney at all and they think that because the laws are such that there's no jail time as a result of this particular criminal activity, that means everything's going to be okay. The problem is that the ImmigrationService and the Department of Homeland Security treat many convictions differently than they do for regular citizens, in that you can have a situation where you plead guilty, you don't get any jail time, and in fact, the judge enters what's called the suspended imposition of sentence or gives some modified relief where you're sentenced, but you don't have to immediately go to jail. You're put on probation, and in those situations, it's great from a jail and state law standpoint, but from an immigration standpoint, it can be a conviction, and that conviction can render you deportable. That's true even if you have your green card. I can't stress it enough. If you're not a US citizen, you're not like everybody else, and you are subject to deportation if you entered guilty pleas on certain crimes. To quote Donald Rumsfeld, the former Secretary of Defense, "You don't know what you don't know.", and that's something that's very, very true. Many criminal defense attorneys find themselves jammed up because they have entered their client into a plea that renders them deportable and the criminal defense attorney never even knew it. We take each one of these situations from scratch. The law is so complicated that we don't ever give off-the-cuff recommendations as to the immigration consequences of a plea. It's so complex that we always start at the very beginning. You have to look at the statute that the person is charged with. You have to look at the Immigration and Nationality Act, which are the laws and regulations that govern these types of convictions, and you have to do a walkthrough of each of the little wrongs of each of the statutes to see if in this particular case, the person's going to be rendered deportable or subject to being placed in deportation proceedings. One thing you need to keep in mind is that ICE will put people into deportation proceedings even if there's a way for them to get out, so you don't want to ever trigger that. You don't ever want to make the mistake of just entering into a guilty plea, so if you're talking to a criminal defense attorney or if you've been charged and you're hearing things like probation, no problem, suspended sentence, these are the kind of buzzwords that you need to say to yourself, "Woah, that immigration attorney Jim Hacking told me once on a video that if I start hearing those kinds of words, that I really need to be careful." We have a lot of friends in the criminal defense bar, and we are happy to sit down and consult with them. The smart ones always call us or another immigration attorney to make sure that their client is protected. Every attorney has a duty to protect their client from immigration consequences and we've seen time and time again where that just hasn't happened. Yo

New York Immigration Lawyers | Immigration Law Firm NY

****FREE OFFICE CONSULTATION****
Call now to speak with an Immigration lawyer 2125719200
Or learn more on www.DrImmigration.com
Feiner & Lavy P.C., Attorneys a...

****FREE OFFICE CONSULTATION****
Call now to speak with an Immigration lawyer 2125719200
Or learn more on www.DrImmigration.com
Feiner & Lavy P.C., Attorneys at Law, provides legal immigration services to individuals and employers looking to obtain work visas, work authorizations, permanent residence, and U.S. citizenship.

****FREE OFFICE CONSULTATION****
Call now to speak with an Immigration lawyer 2125719200
Or learn more on www.DrImmigration.com
Feiner & Lavy P.C., Attorneys at Law, provides legal immigration services to individuals and employers looking to obtain work visas, work authorizations, permanent residence, and U.S. citizenship.

published:14 Jul 2016

views:1904

back

Latifsolicitors.co.uk - Recent Financial changes to Immigration Law for Spouses

Learn about recent Supreme Court decision regarding spouse earnings to complete required application that qualifies under current immigration rules. Can you pro...

Learn about recent Supreme Court decision regarding spouse earnings to complete required application that qualifies under current immigration rules. Can you provide income from 3rd party to prove your earnings? Are there any exceptions to the £18.600 minimum earnings rule?

Learn about recent Supreme Court decision regarding spouse earnings to complete required application that qualifies under current immigration rules. Can you provide income from 3rd party to prove your earnings? Are there any exceptions to the £18.600 minimum earnings rule?

http://www.hykellaw.com/practice-areas/
Immigration & Family LawAttorney in PhiladelphiaNeed a qualified legal professional to handle your personal & business immigration requirements or family’s legal matters?
Hykel Law goes above and beyond to provide experienced legal counsel to businesses and families.
Spearheaded by an experienced Immigration and Family Law Attorney, Renee Hykel Cuddy, our personalized, no-nonsense approach to Immigration Law, Citizenship & Naturalization, Family & Relationship, and Business Immigration legal matters yields the best results.
As part of our Immigration Law service, we expertly cover:
- FamilyBased Immigration
- Marriage/Fiancé Visas
- Asylum
- VAWA Immigration
- Immigration Reform
- Immigration Appeals & Litigation
- DACALawyer
- Visitor/Tourist Visas
- Same Sex Immigration Issues
- Deportation/RemovalDefense, and
- Immigration Waivers
In addition to specialized Citizenship & Naturalization legal services, we offer Family Law services that cover Divorce and Custody, while our Business Immigration service covers:
- Work Visas
- Employment Based Green Cards
- PERM Lawyer, and
- Investor Visas
Hykel Law understands that your family’s primary goal is to stay together, which is why our sympathetic immigration legal service goes the extra mile to get your case approved as quickly as possible. We also understand that in their greatest time of need, clients still require premium results at the lowest rates. We keep cost-effectiveness and quality of service in mind, while striving to deliver premium results.
Armed with experience in handling compliance, documentation, lawful entry of foreign nationals, work permits and much more, Hykel Law works quickly and efficiently to resolve your corporate immigration issues.
For premium quality, results-oriented and cost-effective legal counsel in Immigration Law, Citizenship & Naturalization, Business Immigration Law, and Family Law, call Hykel Law now on 215-246-9400, or visit http://www.hykellaw.com/

http://www.hykellaw.com/practice-areas/
Immigration & Family LawAttorney in PhiladelphiaNeed a qualified legal professional to handle your personal & business immigration requirements or family’s legal matters?
Hykel Law goes above and beyond to provide experienced legal counsel to businesses and families.
Spearheaded by an experienced Immigration and Family Law Attorney, Renee Hykel Cuddy, our personalized, no-nonsense approach to Immigration Law, Citizenship & Naturalization, Family & Relationship, and Business Immigration legal matters yields the best results.
As part of our Immigration Law service, we expertly cover:
- FamilyBased Immigration
- Marriage/Fiancé Visas
- Asylum
- VAWA Immigration
- Immigration Reform
- Immigration Appeals & Litigation
- DACALawyer
- Visitor/Tourist Visas
- Same Sex Immigration Issues
- Deportation/RemovalDefense, and
- Immigration Waivers
In addition to specialized Citizenship & Naturalization legal services, we offer Family Law services that cover Divorce and Custody, while our Business Immigration service covers:
- Work Visas
- Employment Based Green Cards
- PERM Lawyer, and
- Investor Visas
Hykel Law understands that your family’s primary goal is to stay together, which is why our sympathetic immigration legal service goes the extra mile to get your case approved as quickly as possible. We also understand that in their greatest time of need, clients still require premium results at the lowest rates. We keep cost-effectiveness and quality of service in mind, while striving to deliver premium results.
Armed with experience in handling compliance, documentation, lawful entry of foreign nationals, work permits and much more, Hykel Law works quickly and efficiently to resolve your corporate immigration issues.
For premium quality, results-oriented and cost-effective legal counsel in Immigration Law, Citizenship & Naturalization, Business Immigration Law, and Family Law, call Hykel Law now on 215-246-9400, or visit http://www.hykellaw.com/

Immigration Law Updates March 3 2017

http://peerallylaw.com
info@peerallylaw.com
Phone (510) 7425887
Information provided are for educational purposes only. You should not act or refrain to act, so...

http://peerallylaw.com
info@peerallylaw.com
Phone (510) 7425887
Information provided are for educational purposes only. You should not act or refrain to act, solely on the information provided. No attorney-client relationship is created by this video. Attorney reserves the right to refuse the case. If you have any questions, feel free to call (510) 742 5887

http://peerallylaw.com
info@peerallylaw.com
Phone (510) 7425887
Information provided are for educational purposes only. You should not act or refrain to act, solely on the information provided. No attorney-client relationship is created by this video. Attorney reserves the right to refuse the case. If you have any questions, feel free to call (510) 742 5887

Devisers is a leading immigration law firm

We are available to advice and guide our clients throughout the process of immigration law. We have the team of dedicated professionals working in their field o...

We are available to advice and guide our clients throughout the process of immigration law. We have the team of dedicated professionals working in their field of expertise with positive attitude. We take great pride in our staff and have a wonderful team of counselors and professionals working for us. Our counselors are trained and have to meet the benchmarks set by the organization to ensure that they provide the best advice to our clients.
We are aware of the variety of different circumstances and requirements that benefits an individual or corporate clients, this unrivaled understanding helps us in helping you in every aspect of your inquiry. Our Mission is to provide outstanding quality service which is efficient and cost effective that helps us to delight our clients.

We are available to advice and guide our clients throughout the process of immigration law. We have the team of dedicated professionals working in their field of expertise with positive attitude. We take great pride in our staff and have a wonderful team of counselors and professionals working for us. Our counselors are trained and have to meet the benchmarks set by the organization to ensure that they provide the best advice to our clients.
We are aware of the variety of different circumstances and requirements that benefits an individual or corporate clients, this unrivaled understanding helps us in helping you in every aspect of your inquiry. Our Mission is to provide outstanding quality service which is efficient and cost effective that helps us to delight our clients.

Recent changes to immigration law in Argentina have taken foreign communities by surprise and left them worrying about their future.
The government is tightening border controls, which it says are needed for security measures.
Al Jazeera'sDaniel Schweimler reports from Buenos Aires.
- Subscribe to our channel: http://aje.io/AJSubscribe
- Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
- Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
- Check our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

Recent changes to immigration law in Argentina have taken foreign communities by surprise and left them worrying about their future.
The government is tightening border controls, which it says are needed for security measures.
Al Jazeera'sDaniel Schweimler reports from Buenos Aires.
- Subscribe to our channel: http://aje.io/AJSubscribe
- Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
- Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
- Check our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

Immigration Law

Selena Britzius-Negash, LegalProgram Director of the Immigrant Law Center, discusses relevant issues and struggles in immigration law in the Twin Cities. View the training materials here: http://callforjustice.org/legal-referral-training-materials/
Facebook: http://ow.ly/x1r6k
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Call4JusticeLLC
Donate Today: http://ow.ly/z3uAt
Explanatory NoticeThe following video documents a training session on immigration law that took place on February 15, 2013 in Bloomington, Minnesota. The training was arranged by Call for Justice, LLC, a Twin Cities-based non-profit that works to connect low and moderate-income people with legal resources. Part of our work is to train United Way 2-1-1 on the various Twin Cities legal resources.
Selena Britzius-Negash, Program Directo...

Immigration Law Updates March 3 2017

http://peerallylaw.com
info@peerallylaw.com
Phone (510) 7425887
Information provided are for educational purposes only. You should not act or refrain to act, solely on the information provided. No attorney-client relationship is created by this video. Attorney reserves the right to refuse the case. If you have any questions, feel free to call (510) 742 5887

published: 03 Mar 2017

Denmark migration law: A sign of things to come? - Inside Story

Danish MPs pass a controversial law allowing the seizure of assets from refugees.
The Nordic state is not the first European country to tighten controls on refugees.
But a new Danish immigration law is a sign of the darkening mood towards refugee arrivals.
The law allows the seizure of refugees' assets to help pay for their stay. Among other things, it also prevents families being reunited for three years.
Danish politicians say the law is being misunderstood. They argue that, in a welfare state, everyone has to use up their own resources first before claiming benefits.
Critics say the law, and similar measures being taken in other countries, are designed to deter new arrivals - and could heighten tension and xenophobia in some communities.
So is this the new reality for migrants try...

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published: 23 Feb 2017

UK Immigration Law Updates and Spouse/Fiancé Visas, November 2015 Vlog

Immigration Appeals UK Visa Appeals information

Salam & Co Solicitors are UK Immigration Solicitors based in Manchester, London, Birmingham, Leeds, Bolton and ChesterCall:- 01618397396 or 07738719265
Appointment are available for Saturdays
At Salam and Co Solicitors, we have years of experience in providing quality advice and assistance for all Immigration Problems.
We at Salam and Co Solicitors have experience in a whole range of Immigration cases and scenarios. We have access to all the latest developments in this ever-changing area of the law and take special care to ensure our clients receive only the best advice we can offer. No case is too trivial -- we deal in the whole range of Immigration-related matters; from Student visas to Indefinite Leave to Remain. We have special expertise for appeals and human rights and other diff...

Immigration Law Updates June 1 2017 - Matter of A-T Inc, etc.

http://peerallylaw.com
info@peerallylaw.com
Phone (510) 7425887
Covering immigration issues lives including Matter of A-TInc, I-140 revocation, H1B extensions, H1B, H1B cap, H1B Masters cap, programmer analyst, immigration H1B issues, EB1A, National Interest waivers, NIW, h4 visas, H4 ead.
Information provided are for educational purposes only. You should not act or refrain to act, solely on the information provided. No attorney-client relationship is created by this video. Attorney reserves the right to refuse the case. If you have any questions, feel free to call (510) 742 5887

published: 01 Jun 2017

Immigration Law Symposium Panel 1

This Immigration LawSymposium was recorded at UC Irvine School of Law on February 17-18, 2011.
Our labor markets rely heavily on unauthorized workers, yet the law affords these workers only modest workplace protections. Restrictionists condemn sanctuary cities while praising Arizona's S.B. 1070.
Immigrants' rights advocates argue that localities should be allowed to opt out of Secure Communities while battling local anti-immigrant ordinances on preemption grounds. Immigration enforcement efforts are promoted as necessary to restore the rule of law, yet ongoing enforcement efforts sometimes unfold with apparent disregard for due process rights guaranteed by the Constitution.
What are the sources of these impossible choices and contradictory impulses? Can the law be used to alleviate the...

UK Immigration Law show with Mr. S Tariq

TICEMADOX SOLICITORS - IMMIGRATION LAW EEA FAMILY MEMBERS

published: 04 Nov 2014

Career Choice Series: Immigration Law Defense and Advocacy

http://ambar.org/careers In this segment, our speakers will explore immigration law defense and advocacy. ProfessorCooper focuses on defending the rights of detained immigrants and the repercussions of criminal convictions. Nicholás Espíritu advocates for the rights of low-income immigrants before administrative bodies and brings or defends impact litigation (a strategy to bring lawsuits that affect a group of people as part of a broader advocacy strategy - not directly representing an individual). Our speakers will share with you their career paths, provide invaluable insight into what skills you'll need to break into this area, what drew them to it, the pros and cons, and what a typical day in their practice entails.
Speakers:
Holly S. Cooper, Clinical Professor, Co-Director, Immigrat...

Selena Britzius-Negash, LegalProgram Director of the Immigrant Law Center, discusses relevant issues and struggles in immigration law in the Twin Cities. View the training materials here: http://callforjustice.org/legal-referral-training-materials/
Facebook: http://ow.ly/x1r6k
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Call4JusticeLLC
Donate Today: http://ow.ly/z3uAt
Explanatory NoticeThe following video documents a training session on immigration law that took place on February 15, 2013 in Bloomington, Minnesota. The training was arranged by Call for Justice, LLC, a Twin Cities-based non-profit that works to connect low and moderate-income people with legal resources. Part of our work is to train United Way 2-1-1 on the various Twin Cities legal resources.
Selena Britzius-Negash, Program Director at the Immigrant Law Center of Minnesota, conducted the training. Ellen Krug, Executive Director of Call for Justice, LLC, coordinated the session. The training session was presented to Information and ReferralSpecialists and other employees of United Way 2-1-1.
The information contained in this video is not legal advice. Viewers seeking legal assistance should contact an attorney. If you are a Minnesota resident in need of legal assistance because of an immigration law issue and unable to afford an attorney, you should call United Way 2-1-1 by dialing 2-1-1.
At various places in the video, there may be references to “Zoey” or “Zoey Zalopa.” This is a fictional character used for purposes of exemplifying referrals to various legal resources.

Selena Britzius-Negash, LegalProgram Director of the Immigrant Law Center, discusses relevant issues and struggles in immigration law in the Twin Cities. View the training materials here: http://callforjustice.org/legal-referral-training-materials/
Facebook: http://ow.ly/x1r6k
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Call4JusticeLLC
Donate Today: http://ow.ly/z3uAt
Explanatory NoticeThe following video documents a training session on immigration law that took place on February 15, 2013 in Bloomington, Minnesota. The training was arranged by Call for Justice, LLC, a Twin Cities-based non-profit that works to connect low and moderate-income people with legal resources. Part of our work is to train United Way 2-1-1 on the various Twin Cities legal resources.
Selena Britzius-Negash, Program Director at the Immigrant Law Center of Minnesota, conducted the training. Ellen Krug, Executive Director of Call for Justice, LLC, coordinated the session. The training session was presented to Information and ReferralSpecialists and other employees of United Way 2-1-1.
The information contained in this video is not legal advice. Viewers seeking legal assistance should contact an attorney. If you are a Minnesota resident in need of legal assistance because of an immigration law issue and unable to afford an attorney, you should call United Way 2-1-1 by dialing 2-1-1.
At various places in the video, there may be references to “Zoey” or “Zoey Zalopa.” This is a fictional character used for purposes of exemplifying referrals to various legal resources.

Immigration Law Updates March 3 2017

http://peerallylaw.com
info@peerallylaw.com
Phone (510) 7425887
Information provided are for educational purposes only. You should not act or refrain to act, so...

http://peerallylaw.com
info@peerallylaw.com
Phone (510) 7425887
Information provided are for educational purposes only. You should not act or refrain to act, solely on the information provided. No attorney-client relationship is created by this video. Attorney reserves the right to refuse the case. If you have any questions, feel free to call (510) 742 5887

http://peerallylaw.com
info@peerallylaw.com
Phone (510) 7425887
Information provided are for educational purposes only. You should not act or refrain to act, solely on the information provided. No attorney-client relationship is created by this video. Attorney reserves the right to refuse the case. If you have any questions, feel free to call (510) 742 5887

Denmark migration law: A sign of things to come? - Inside Story

Danish MPs pass a controversial law allowing the seizure of assets from refugees.
The Nordic state is not the first European country to tighten controls on ref...

Danish MPs pass a controversial law allowing the seizure of assets from refugees.
The Nordic state is not the first European country to tighten controls on refugees.
But a new Danish immigration law is a sign of the darkening mood towards refugee arrivals.
The law allows the seizure of refugees' assets to help pay for their stay. Among other things, it also prevents families being reunited for three years.
Danish politicians say the law is being misunderstood. They argue that, in a welfare state, everyone has to use up their own resources first before claiming benefits.
Critics say the law, and similar measures being taken in other countries, are designed to deter new arrivals - and could heighten tension and xenophobia in some communities.
So is this the new reality for migrants trying to settle in Europe?
And with governments hardening their positions, who will care for those most in need?
Presenter: Peter Dobbie
Guests:
Ramazan Salman - Director of the help group Migrants for Migrants
Nando Sigona - Senior Lecturer at the University of Birmingham and specialist on the refugee and migration crisis
Irene Zugasti - Co-author of the Politheor report: 'Civil Society Responses to the RefugeeCrisis'
READ MORE: http://aje.io/7e8u
- Subscribe to our channel: http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
- Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
- Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
- Check our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

Danish MPs pass a controversial law allowing the seizure of assets from refugees.
The Nordic state is not the first European country to tighten controls on refugees.
But a new Danish immigration law is a sign of the darkening mood towards refugee arrivals.
The law allows the seizure of refugees' assets to help pay for their stay. Among other things, it also prevents families being reunited for three years.
Danish politicians say the law is being misunderstood. They argue that, in a welfare state, everyone has to use up their own resources first before claiming benefits.
Critics say the law, and similar measures being taken in other countries, are designed to deter new arrivals - and could heighten tension and xenophobia in some communities.
So is this the new reality for migrants trying to settle in Europe?
And with governments hardening their positions, who will care for those most in need?
Presenter: Peter Dobbie
Guests:
Ramazan Salman - Director of the help group Migrants for Migrants
Nando Sigona - Senior Lecturer at the University of Birmingham and specialist on the refugee and migration crisis
Irene Zugasti - Co-author of the Politheor report: 'Civil Society Responses to the RefugeeCrisis'
READ MORE: http://aje.io/7e8u
- Subscribe to our channel: http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
- Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
- Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
- Check our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

Subscribe to the 'Quite Frankly' channel and hit the Notification Bell so you always get a live alert when the mics go hot!
Support the nightly show on Patreon...

Subscribe to the 'Quite Frankly' channel and hit the Notification Bell so you always get a live alert when the mics go hot!
Support the nightly show on Patreon and become my boss: https://www.patreon.com/QuiteFrankly
'Quite Frankly' airs Live Monday-Friday, at 7pm ET
Subscribe to the Podcast:
SoundCloud: http://bit.ly/2dTMD13
iTunes: http://apple.co/2dMURMq
Google Play: http://bit.ly/2e1c7Iq
Twitter: @PoliticalOrgy

Subscribe to the 'Quite Frankly' channel and hit the Notification Bell so you always get a live alert when the mics go hot!
Support the nightly show on Patreon and become my boss: https://www.patreon.com/QuiteFrankly
'Quite Frankly' airs Live Monday-Friday, at 7pm ET
Subscribe to the Podcast:
SoundCloud: http://bit.ly/2dTMD13
iTunes: http://apple.co/2dMURMq
Google Play: http://bit.ly/2e1c7Iq
Twitter: @PoliticalOrgy

published:23 Feb 2017

views:623

back

UK Immigration Law Updates and Spouse/Fiancé Visas, November 2015 Vlog

Salam & Co Solicitors are UK Immigration Solicitors based in Manchester, London, Birmingham, Leeds, Bolton and ChesterCall:- 01618397396 or 07738719265
Appointment are available for Saturdays
At Salam and Co Solicitors, we have years of experience in providing quality advice and assistance for all Immigration Problems.
We at Salam and Co Solicitors have experience in a whole range of Immigration cases and scenarios. We have access to all the latest developments in this ever-changing area of the law and take special care to ensure our clients receive only the best advice we can offer. No case is too trivial -- we deal in the whole range of Immigration-related matters; from Student visas to Indefinite Leave to Remain. We have special expertise for appeals and human rights and other difficult and highly complex cases including for Out Of The Rules and Discretionary Leave to Remain.
We specialize in Immigration Matters and are an independent solicitors and not affiliated with the UK border agency.
Here at Salam and Co we do not just offer advice, however.
We are fully prepared to attend appeals at the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal (AIT) and do so on a regular basis. In fact, we endeavour to draft our Grounds of Appeal as fully as possible, to ensure that they represent our arguments to the fullest and portray the full legal position of our clients.
Deportation is the imposed removal of immigrants who breached UK immigration Law and rules.

Salam & Co Solicitors are UK Immigration Solicitors based in Manchester, London, Birmingham, Leeds, Bolton and ChesterCall:- 01618397396 or 07738719265
Appointment are available for Saturdays
At Salam and Co Solicitors, we have years of experience in providing quality advice and assistance for all Immigration Problems.
We at Salam and Co Solicitors have experience in a whole range of Immigration cases and scenarios. We have access to all the latest developments in this ever-changing area of the law and take special care to ensure our clients receive only the best advice we can offer. No case is too trivial -- we deal in the whole range of Immigration-related matters; from Student visas to Indefinite Leave to Remain. We have special expertise for appeals and human rights and other difficult and highly complex cases including for Out Of The Rules and Discretionary Leave to Remain.
We specialize in Immigration Matters and are an independent solicitors and not affiliated with the UK border agency.
Here at Salam and Co we do not just offer advice, however.
We are fully prepared to attend appeals at the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal (AIT) and do so on a regular basis. In fact, we endeavour to draft our Grounds of Appeal as fully as possible, to ensure that they represent our arguments to the fullest and portray the full legal position of our clients.
Deportation is the imposed removal of immigrants who breached UK immigration Law and rules.

40 years of US Immigration - History of Immigration Law

The Immigration Act of 1965 gets rid of the nationality quotas, but limits annual immigration from the eastern hemisphere to 170,000, with a limit of 20,000 imm...

The Immigration Act of 1965 gets rid of the nationality quotas, but limits annual immigration from the eastern hemisphere to 170,000, with a limit of 20,000 immigrants per country, and for the first time caps annual immigration from the western hemisphere at 120,000, without the country limit. In addition, a preference system is established for family members of U.S. citizens.
1966
Cuban Adjustment Act allows Cubans to apply for permanent resident status after residing in the U.S. for two years.
1975At the end of the Vietnam War, the U.S. passes the Indochina Migration and Refugee Assistance Act of 1975 that resettles about 200,000 Vietnamese and Cambodian refugees in the U.S. and gives them a special parole status. The program was extended to Laotians in 1976.
1978
The immigration caps outlined in the 1965 Immigration Act are replaced with an overall annual limit of 290,000.
1980The Refugee Act defines refugees as a person who flees his or her country âon account of race, religion, nationality, or political opinion.â Refugees are considered a different category than immigrants. The president and Congress are granted the authority to establish an annual ceiling on the number of refugees allowed into the U.S. The act also lowers the annual limit of immigrants to 270,000, from 290,000.
1986
The Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 (IRCA) allows immigrants who had entered the U.S. before Jan. 1, 1982, to apply for legal status but required them to pay fines, fees, and back taxes. It also gives the same rights to immigrants who worked in agricultural jobs for 90 days before May 1982. About 3 million immigrants gained legal status through the law. The act also requires employers to verify work status of all new hires and fine those who hire undocumented workers.
1990
The Immigration Act of 1990 sets an annual ceiling of 700,000 immigrants for three years, and 675,000 thereafter.
1996The IllegalImmigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act broadens the definition of âaggravated felonyâ and increases the number of crimes classified as such so immigrants could be deported for a wider range of crimes. The law is applied retroactively. The act also increased the number of Border Patrol agents and established an âexpedited removalâ procedure to deport immigrants without a formal hearing.
Personal Responsibility and WorkOpportunityReconciliation Act sharply cuts legal permanent residentsâ eligibility for many public-assistance benefits, including food stamps, Supplemental Security Income (SSI), Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), and Medicaid.
2005
The REAL ID Act of 2005 requires states to verify a personâs immigration status or citizenship before issuing licenses, expands restrictions on refugees requesting asylum, and limits the habeas corpus rights of immigrants.
2006
The REAL ID Act of 2005 requires states to verify a personâs immigration status or citizenship before issuing licenses, expands restrictions on refugees requesting asylum, and limits the habeas corpus rights of immigrants.
2014
On Nov. 20, 2014, President Barack Obama announced he was taking executive action to delay the deportation of some 5 million illegal immigrants. Under the new policy people who are parents of U.S. citizens or legal residents will receive deportation deferrals and authorization to work legally if they have been in the U.S. for more than five years and pass background checks. Obama's action also amended the 2012Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which allows people under age 31 who were brought to the U.S. as children to apply for two-year deportation deferrals and work permits. Obama's policy change lifted the age ceiling and added a year to the deferral period. Twenty-six states challenged the executive order, and in February 2015 a federal judge issued a preliminary injunction, temporarily blocking the provisions of the executive order while the states pursued a lawsuit to permanently shut down the program.

The Immigration Act of 1965 gets rid of the nationality quotas, but limits annual immigration from the eastern hemisphere to 170,000, with a limit of 20,000 immigrants per country, and for the first time caps annual immigration from the western hemisphere at 120,000, without the country limit. In addition, a preference system is established for family members of U.S. citizens.
1966
Cuban Adjustment Act allows Cubans to apply for permanent resident status after residing in the U.S. for two years.
1975At the end of the Vietnam War, the U.S. passes the Indochina Migration and Refugee Assistance Act of 1975 that resettles about 200,000 Vietnamese and Cambodian refugees in the U.S. and gives them a special parole status. The program was extended to Laotians in 1976.
1978
The immigration caps outlined in the 1965 Immigration Act are replaced with an overall annual limit of 290,000.
1980The Refugee Act defines refugees as a person who flees his or her country âon account of race, religion, nationality, or political opinion.â Refugees are considered a different category than immigrants. The president and Congress are granted the authority to establish an annual ceiling on the number of refugees allowed into the U.S. The act also lowers the annual limit of immigrants to 270,000, from 290,000.
1986
The Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 (IRCA) allows immigrants who had entered the U.S. before Jan. 1, 1982, to apply for legal status but required them to pay fines, fees, and back taxes. It also gives the same rights to immigrants who worked in agricultural jobs for 90 days before May 1982. About 3 million immigrants gained legal status through the law. The act also requires employers to verify work status of all new hires and fine those who hire undocumented workers.
1990
The Immigration Act of 1990 sets an annual ceiling of 700,000 immigrants for three years, and 675,000 thereafter.
1996The IllegalImmigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act broadens the definition of âaggravated felonyâ and increases the number of crimes classified as such so immigrants could be deported for a wider range of crimes. The law is applied retroactively. The act also increased the number of Border Patrol agents and established an âexpedited removalâ procedure to deport immigrants without a formal hearing.
Personal Responsibility and WorkOpportunityReconciliation Act sharply cuts legal permanent residentsâ eligibility for many public-assistance benefits, including food stamps, Supplemental Security Income (SSI), Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), and Medicaid.
2005
The REAL ID Act of 2005 requires states to verify a personâs immigration status or citizenship before issuing licenses, expands restrictions on refugees requesting asylum, and limits the habeas corpus rights of immigrants.
2006
The REAL ID Act of 2005 requires states to verify a personâs immigration status or citizenship before issuing licenses, expands restrictions on refugees requesting asylum, and limits the habeas corpus rights of immigrants.
2014
On Nov. 20, 2014, President Barack Obama announced he was taking executive action to delay the deportation of some 5 million illegal immigrants. Under the new policy people who are parents of U.S. citizens or legal residents will receive deportation deferrals and authorization to work legally if they have been in the U.S. for more than five years and pass background checks. Obama's action also amended the 2012Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which allows people under age 31 who were brought to the U.S. as children to apply for two-year deportation deferrals and work permits. Obama's policy change lifted the age ceiling and added a year to the deferral period. Twenty-six states challenged the executive order, and in February 2015 a federal judge issued a preliminary injunction, temporarily blocking the provisions of the executive order while the states pursued a lawsuit to permanently shut down the program.

published:19 Apr 2017

views:855

back

2016 Immigration Law Lecture Series (1 of 3) - Featured Speaker Charles Foster

This Immigration LawSymposium was recorded at UC Irvine School of Law on February 17-18, 2011.
Our labor markets rely heavily on unauthorized workers, yet the law affords these workers only modest workplace protections. Restrictionists condemn sanctuary cities while praising Arizona's S.B. 1070.
Immigrants' rights advocates argue that localities should be allowed to opt out of Secure Communities while battling local anti-immigrant ordinances on preemption grounds. Immigration enforcement efforts are promoted as necessary to restore the rule of law, yet ongoing enforcement efforts sometimes unfold with apparent disregard for due process rights guaranteed by the Constitution.
What are the sources of these impossible choices and contradictory impulses? Can the law be used to alleviate these tensions, or must we look beyond law's boundaries? Is political compromise the only answer, or will one agenda emerge to the exclusion of others? Is change destined to be incremental or are there opportunities for sweeping overhaul? These are just some of the questions this symposium hoped to answer.
Co-sponsored by UC Irvine's Center in Law, Society, and Culture and Center for Research on Immigration, Population and Public Policy

This Immigration LawSymposium was recorded at UC Irvine School of Law on February 17-18, 2011.
Our labor markets rely heavily on unauthorized workers, yet the law affords these workers only modest workplace protections. Restrictionists condemn sanctuary cities while praising Arizona's S.B. 1070.
Immigrants' rights advocates argue that localities should be allowed to opt out of Secure Communities while battling local anti-immigrant ordinances on preemption grounds. Immigration enforcement efforts are promoted as necessary to restore the rule of law, yet ongoing enforcement efforts sometimes unfold with apparent disregard for due process rights guaranteed by the Constitution.
What are the sources of these impossible choices and contradictory impulses? Can the law be used to alleviate these tensions, or must we look beyond law's boundaries? Is political compromise the only answer, or will one agenda emerge to the exclusion of others? Is change destined to be incremental or are there opportunities for sweeping overhaul? These are just some of the questions this symposium hoped to answer.
Co-sponsored by UC Irvine's Center in Law, Society, and Culture and Center for Research on Immigration, Population and Public Policy

Immigration Law

Selena Britzius-Negash, LegalProgram Director of the Immigrant Law Center, discusses relevant issues and struggles in immigration law in the Twin Cities. View the training materials here: http://callforjustice.org/legal-referral-training-materials/
Facebook: http://ow.ly/x1r6k
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Call4JusticeLLC
Donate Today: http://ow.ly/z3uAt
Explanatory NoticeThe following video documents a training session on immigration law that took place on February 15, 2013 in Bloomington, Minnesota. The training was arranged by Call for Justice, LLC, a Twin Cities-based non-profit that works to connect low and moderate-income people with legal resources. Part of our work is to train United Way 2-1-1 on the various Twin Cities legal resources.
Selena Britzius-Negash, Program Director at the Immigrant Law Center of Minnesota, conducted the training. Ellen Krug, Executive Director of Call for Justice, LLC, coordinated the session. The training session was presented to Information and ReferralSpecialists and other employees of United Way 2-1-1.
The information contained in this video is not legal advice. Viewers seeking legal assistance should contact an attorney. If you are a Minnesota resident in need of legal assistance because of an immigration law issue and unable to afford an attorney, you should call United Way 2-1-1 by dialing 2-1-1.
At various places in the video, there may be references to “Zoey” or “Zoey Zalopa.” This is a fictional character used for purposes of exemplifying referrals to various legal resources.

How Hard Is It To Legally Enter The U.S.?

Is This A BetterImmigrationSystem? http://testu.be/1lT4Uhk
Why US Work Visas Are So Controversial http://testu.be/1HXGayK
Subscribe! http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
The U.S. is one of the most visited places on earth, but has very complicated immigration laws. So just how difficult is it to enter the US?
Learn More:
US visas get new scrutiny after California, Paris attacks
http://bigstory.ap.org/article/41707308daa642649eb14a5283d6473a/us-visas-get-new-scrutiny-after-california-paris-attacks
"Visas used by foreigners to travel to the United States are getting new scrutiny in the wake of shooting massacres in California and France."
Directory of VisaCategories
http://travel.state.gov/content/visas/en/general/all-visa-categories.html
"The purpose of your intended travel and other facts will determine what type of visa is required under U.S. immigration law."
Why Narendra Modi Was Banned From the U.S.
http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052702303380004579520041301275638
"Narendra Modi is the only person ever denied a U.S. visa based on a little-known law on religious freedom."
MusicTrack Courtesy of APM Music:
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Check Jules out on Twitter: https://twitter.com/jules_su

1:37

U.S. Immigration Law : How to Become an Immigration Lawyer

In order to become an immigration lawyer, a person must graduate from a four-year universi...

U.S. Immigration Law : How to Become an Immigration Lawyer

In order to become an immigration lawyer, a person must graduate from a four-year university or college, make a satisfactory grade on the LSAT and enroll in law school. Find out how to pass the bar examination and become an immigration lawyer with tips from a certified civil mediator in this free video on immigration law.
Expert: Robert M. ToddContact: www.wearehdtv.com
Bio: Robert Todd is the managing partner and president of Robert M. Todd, P.A. and Family Law Solutions.
Filmmaker: Christopher Rokosz

Immigration Law Jobs - Being An Immigration Lawyer

http://jdcareersoutthere.com/help-the-tired-poor-huddled-masses-as-an-immigration-lawyer/ Immigration law jobs come in a few varieties, as immigration lawyer Christina Lee tells us in this interview exploring careers for lawyers. Being a lawyer practicing immigration law can involve working with employers on employment-based immigration issues or working with families on removal defense and family-based immigration law issues.
Christina's law practice involves both aspects of immigration law, although she tells us that it's common to practice in one area or the other. This video explores law jobs focused on removal defense and family-based immigration law. Christina explains that
these law jobs are part counseling (petitioning to help families come to or stay in the United States) and part litigation careers (since removal defense involves going to court and fighting to help clients stay in the United States).
Whether you're in law school, wondering whether you should go to law school or exploring jobs to do with a law degree, you may want to check out immigration law jobs. In the full interview at JDCOT, Christina tells host Marc Luber why immigration law is a rewarding path, how to break in to immigration law jobs and explains a typical day, what skills and personality types best fit these careers for lawyers, and how to succeed.
Visit us at: http://JDCareersOutThere.com
99 ThingsTo Do With A Law Degree (eBook): http://bit.ly/jd99things
JDCOT on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/JDCOT
JDCOT on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/JD_COT
JDCOT on Google+:http://bit.ly/JDCOTgplus
JDCOT on LinkedIn: http://ow.ly/hawCx

3:59

Immigration Law Paralegal

American Institute for Paralegal Studies Video Lecture Series. Immigration Law is a compl...

When criminal law and immigration law collide

What does an immigrant need to know if they've come into contact with law enforcement? Hi, I'm Jim Hacking, immigration attorney here in St. Louis Missouri. You know, we don't do a lot of criminal law here at the Hacking Law Practice, but I was in criminal court yesterday and I was watching a judge take a series of guilty pleas to various misdemeanors. In this case, it was a case that I was assigned to by the court, so I had to appear and I didn't work out a favorable result for my client. While I was sitting there, it occurred to me that many times, immigrants find themselves in those same situations. They can be misdemeanors or felonies, and one of the main mistakes that people make, we talk about this all the time, is when an immigrant comes into contact with law enforcement, what should they do? The first thing they should do is call an immigration attorney. The second thing they should do is call a criminal defense attorney, and here's why: the law is fundamentally different for immigrants who get into trouble with the law than it is for people who are US citizens. If you're not a US citizen, you do not have the same protection as everybody else, and there are many crimes that while they would not cause serious consequences to a non-immigrant, that is if the person's a citizen, they're going to not get into much trouble, for non-citizens, for immigrants, they can cause huge problems. What am I talking about? One of the things we hear a lot of at our office is an immigrant who has found themselves in trouble with the law, and they get a criminal defense attorney or no criminal defense attorney at all and they think that because the laws are such that there's no jail time as a result of this particular criminal activity, that means everything's going to be okay. The problem is that the ImmigrationService and the Department of Homeland Security treat many convictions differently than they do for regular citizens, in that you can have a situation where you plead guilty, you don't get any jail time, and in fact, the judge enters what's called the suspended imposition of sentence or gives some modified relief where you're sentenced, but you don't have to immediately go to jail. You're put on probation, and in those situations, it's great from a jail and state law standpoint, but from an immigration standpoint, it can be a conviction, and that conviction can render you deportable. That's true even if you have your green card. I can't stress it enough. If you're not a US citizen, you're not like everybody else, and you are subject to deportation if you entered guilty pleas on certain crimes. To quote Donald Rumsfeld, the former Secretary of Defense, "You don't know what you don't know.", and that's something that's very, very true. Many criminal defense attorneys find themselves jammed up because they have entered their client into a plea that renders them deportable and the criminal defense attorney never even knew it. We take each one of these situations from scratch. The law is so complicated that we don't ever give off-the-cuff recommendations as to the immigration consequences of a plea. It's so complex that we always start at the very beginning. You have to look at the statute that the person is charged with. You have to look at the Immigration and Nationality Act, which are the laws and regulations that govern these types of convictions, and you have to do a walkthrough of each of the little wrongs of each of the statutes to see if in this particular case, the person's going to be rendered deportable or subject to being placed in deportation proceedings. One thing you need to keep in mind is that ICE will put people into deportation proceedings even if there's a way for them to get out, so you don't want to ever trigger that. You don't ever want to make the mistake of just entering into a guilty plea, so if you're talking to a criminal defense attorney or if you've been charged and you're hearing things like probation, no problem, suspended sentence, these are the kind of buzzwords that you need to say to yourself, "Woah, that immigration attorney Jim Hacking told me once on a video that if I start hearing those kinds of words, that I really need to be careful." We have a lot of friends in the criminal defense bar, and we are happy to sit down and consult with them. The smart ones always call us or another immigration attorney to make sure that their client is protected. Every attorney has a duty to protect their client from immigration consequences and we've seen time and time again where that just hasn't happened. Yo

1:55

New York Immigration Lawyers | Immigration Law Firm NY

****FREE OFFICE CONSULTATION****
Call now to speak with an Immigration lawyer 2125719200
O...

New York Immigration Lawyers | Immigration Law Firm NY

****FREE OFFICE CONSULTATION****
Call now to speak with an Immigration lawyer 2125719200
Or learn more on www.DrImmigration.com
Feiner & Lavy P.C., Attorneys at Law, provides legal immigration services to individuals and employers looking to obtain work visas, work authorizations, permanent residence, and U.S. citizenship.

4:55

Latifsolicitors.co.uk - Recent Financial changes to Immigration Law for Spouses

Latifsolicitors.co.uk - Recent Financial changes to Immigration Law for Spouses

Learn about recent Supreme Court decision regarding spouse earnings to complete required application that qualifies under current immigration rules. Can you provide income from 3rd party to prove your earnings? Are there any exceptions to the £18.600 minimum earnings rule?

Immigration Law

Selena Britzius-Negash, LegalProgram Director of the Immigrant Law Center, discusses relevant issues and struggles in immigration law in the Twin Cities. View the training materials here: http://callforjustice.org/legal-referral-training-materials/
Facebook: http://ow.ly/x1r6k
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Call4JusticeLLC
Donate Today: http://ow.ly/z3uAt
Explanatory NoticeThe following video documents a training session on immigration law that took place on February 15, 2013 in Bloomington, Minnesota. The training was arranged by Call for Justice, LLC, a Twin Cities-based non-profit that works to connect low and moderate-income people with legal resources. Part of our work is to train United Way 2-1-1 on the various Twin Cities legal resources.
Selena Britzius-Negash, Program Director at the Immigrant Law Center of Minnesota, conducted the training. Ellen Krug, Executive Director of Call for Justice, LLC, coordinated the session. The training session was presented to Information and ReferralSpecialists and other employees of United Way 2-1-1.
The information contained in this video is not legal advice. Viewers seeking legal assistance should contact an attorney. If you are a Minnesota resident in need of legal assistance because of an immigration law issue and unable to afford an attorney, you should call United Way 2-1-1 by dialing 2-1-1.
At various places in the video, there may be references to “Zoey” or “Zoey Zalopa.” This is a fictional character used for purposes of exemplifying referrals to various legal resources.

Immigration Law Updates March 3 2017

http://peerallylaw.com
info@peerallylaw.com
Phone (510) 7425887
Information provided are for educational purposes only. You should not act or refrain to act, solely on the information provided. No attorney-client relationship is created by this video. Attorney reserves the right to refuse the case. If you have any questions, feel free to call (510) 742 5887

25:01

Denmark migration law: A sign of things to come? - Inside Story

Danish MPs pass a controversial law allowing the seizure of assets from refugees.
The Nor...

Denmark migration law: A sign of things to come? - Inside Story

Danish MPs pass a controversial law allowing the seizure of assets from refugees.
The Nordic state is not the first European country to tighten controls on refugees.
But a new Danish immigration law is a sign of the darkening mood towards refugee arrivals.
The law allows the seizure of refugees' assets to help pay for their stay. Among other things, it also prevents families being reunited for three years.
Danish politicians say the law is being misunderstood. They argue that, in a welfare state, everyone has to use up their own resources first before claiming benefits.
Critics say the law, and similar measures being taken in other countries, are designed to deter new arrivals - and could heighten tension and xenophobia in some communities.
So is this the new reality for migrants trying to settle in Europe?
And with governments hardening their positions, who will care for those most in need?
Presenter: Peter Dobbie
Guests:
Ramazan Salman - Director of the help group Migrants for Migrants
Nando Sigona - Senior Lecturer at the University of Birmingham and specialist on the refugee and migration crisis
Irene Zugasti - Co-author of the Politheor report: 'Civil Society Responses to the RefugeeCrisis'
READ MORE: http://aje.io/7e8u
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44:18

Legal Help Desk Episode 118: Citizenship and Immigration

In this episode of Legal Help Desk, Attorneys Karen Jimeno and Rod Nepomuceno will discuss...

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22:14

UK Immigration Law Updates and Spouse/Fiancé Visas, November 2015 Vlog

Up to date immigration law updates and the current spouse/fiancé visa Immigration requirem...

Immigration Appeals UK Visa Appeals information

Salam & Co Solicitors are UK Immigration Solicitors based in Manchester, London, Birmingham, Leeds, Bolton and ChesterCall:- 01618397396 or 07738719265
Appointment are available for Saturdays
At Salam and Co Solicitors, we have years of experience in providing quality advice and assistance for all Immigration Problems.
We at Salam and Co Solicitors have experience in a whole range of Immigration cases and scenarios. We have access to all the latest developments in this ever-changing area of the law and take special care to ensure our clients receive only the best advice we can offer. No case is too trivial -- we deal in the whole range of Immigration-related matters; from Student visas to Indefinite Leave to Remain. We have special expertise for appeals and human rights and other difficult and highly complex cases including for Out Of The Rules and Discretionary Leave to Remain.
We specialize in Immigration Matters and are an independent solicitors and not affiliated with the UK border agency.
Here at Salam and Co we do not just offer advice, however.
We are fully prepared to attend appeals at the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal (AIT) and do so on a regular basis. In fact, we endeavour to draft our Grounds of Appeal as fully as possible, to ensure that they represent our arguments to the fullest and portray the full legal position of our clients.
Deportation is the imposed removal of immigrants who breached UK immigration Law and rules.

1:36:48

Legal Ethics at the Intersection of Immigration and Criminal Law

Justice For All: Ensuring Ethical Representation and Access to Justice for Immigrants
Nove...

40 years of US Immigration - History of Immigration Law

The Immigration Act of 1965 gets rid of the nationality quotas, but limits annual immigration from the eastern hemisphere to 170,000, with a limit of 20,000 immigrants per country, and for the first time caps annual immigration from the western hemisphere at 120,000, without the country limit. In addition, a preference system is established for family members of U.S. citizens.
1966
Cuban Adjustment Act allows Cubans to apply for permanent resident status after residing in the U.S. for two years.
1975At the end of the Vietnam War, the U.S. passes the Indochina Migration and Refugee Assistance Act of 1975 that resettles about 200,000 Vietnamese and Cambodian refugees in the U.S. and gives them a special parole status. The program was extended to Laotians in 1976.
1978
The immigration caps outlined in the 1965 Immigration Act are replaced with an overall annual limit of 290,000.
1980The Refugee Act defines refugees as a person who flees his or her country âon account of race, religion, nationality, or political opinion.â Refugees are considered a different category than immigrants. The president and Congress are granted the authority to establish an annual ceiling on the number of refugees allowed into the U.S. The act also lowers the annual limit of immigrants to 270,000, from 290,000.
1986
The Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 (IRCA) allows immigrants who had entered the U.S. before Jan. 1, 1982, to apply for legal status but required them to pay fines, fees, and back taxes. It also gives the same rights to immigrants who worked in agricultural jobs for 90 days before May 1982. About 3 million immigrants gained legal status through the law. The act also requires employers to verify work status of all new hires and fine those who hire undocumented workers.
1990
The Immigration Act of 1990 sets an annual ceiling of 700,000 immigrants for three years, and 675,000 thereafter.
1996The IllegalImmigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act broadens the definition of âaggravated felonyâ and increases the number of crimes classified as such so immigrants could be deported for a wider range of crimes. The law is applied retroactively. The act also increased the number of Border Patrol agents and established an âexpedited removalâ procedure to deport immigrants without a formal hearing.
Personal Responsibility and WorkOpportunityReconciliation Act sharply cuts legal permanent residentsâ eligibility for many public-assistance benefits, including food stamps, Supplemental Security Income (SSI), Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), and Medicaid.
2005
The REAL ID Act of 2005 requires states to verify a personâs immigration status or citizenship before issuing licenses, expands restrictions on refugees requesting asylum, and limits the habeas corpus rights of immigrants.
2006
The REAL ID Act of 2005 requires states to verify a personâs immigration status or citizenship before issuing licenses, expands restrictions on refugees requesting asylum, and limits the habeas corpus rights of immigrants.
2014
On Nov. 20, 2014, President Barack Obama announced he was taking executive action to delay the deportation of some 5 million illegal immigrants. Under the new policy people who are parents of U.S. citizens or legal residents will receive deportation deferrals and authorization to work legally if they have been in the U.S. for more than five years and pass background checks. Obama's action also amended the 2012Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which allows people under age 31 who were brought to the U.S. as children to apply for two-year deportation deferrals and work permits. Obama's policy change lifted the age ceiling and added a year to the deferral period. Twenty-six states challenged the executive order, and in February 2015 a federal judge issued a preliminary injunction, temporarily blocking the provisions of the executive order while the states pursued a lawsuit to permanently shut down the program.

56:39

2016 Immigration Law Lecture Series (1 of 3) - Featured Speaker Charles Foster

In the first lecture of a three-part series from the Office of Vince Ryan, Harris County A...

TICEMADOX SOLICITORS - IMMIGRATION LAW EEA FAMILY...

Career Choice Series: Immigration Law Defense and ...

Immigration Law

Intro:CrisisThis is a worldwide escapadeHave every massive fraidBuju Banton did tell yuh alreadyChorus:Every nation bow to the immigration lawImmigrant shuffle what a suppenNo more ease up due to a certain clauseWelfare get reform, no more green cardA nuff man nuh realise a time fi come a dem yaadRepeatVerse 1:Run off to the land of opportunity opportunityIndeed noone gives away good morningThe capital of greedStill yuh survive inna SamThru the constant pressure, victimizationPhonso say him did done have a planTell Sonia send hoe him bag and panThem hol' on pon Paul, Carl and DevonSome man who run the place thru dem there so longTek dem off a di line without a questionSen dem right back inna dem born landChorusVerse 2:Tell unno fi come, bout unno nuh ready yetOnly citizens alone shall get a healthy kitSam get serious, tighten all loop holesWoe be unto all petty pushers, so called dupeNot what yu gained, but what you attainedTo live and die in the USA, such a shameAnalyse your imprint with what you have gainedMinimun wage is blood sweat and painYou take my identity and left me in shameOh Jah, oh JahChorusVerse 3:Who tell dem not to respect Sam lawYuh mean yuh never knoe sey immigration a lawFederal violation of Federal lawsObserve the eagle clenching its clawsTo get across this border, keeps getting harderEven though I've been a resident from a youthMi nuh waan yuh handle mi like no pancootDig up mi few possessions and soil up mi suitConfiscate mi docs without no excuseChorus

LONDON (AP) — A British surgeon has admitted assaulting two patients by burning his initials into their livers during transplant operations ...Bramhall used an argon beam coagulator, which seals bleeding blood vessels with an electric beam, to mark his initials on the organs ... ....

District JudgeTed Stewart said during a hearing in Salt Lake City that Lyle Jeffs deserved the 57-month prison sentence because his behavior showed he doesn't respect U.S ... Jeffs is an adult. He knows right from wrong." ... He was ordered to pay $1 million in restitution ... "I do humbly accept my responsibly for my actions ... The FBI put up a $50,000 reward....

Janet Yellen announced that for the third time this year and the fifth time since the financial crisis, the Federal Reserve was increasing interest rates another quarter of a point on Wednesday, according to National Public Radio. Federal policymakers aid the increase in the benchmark federal funds rate would shift from 1.25 percent to 1.5 percent, the third increase on the key rate this year ...Economic growth in the U.S....

Undocumentedimmigrants, DACA recipients and immigrant rights advocates on Wednesday officially opened DreamActCentral, a tent space on Washington'sNational Mall that will serve as headquarters for a final push this year to urge Congress to pass legislation replacing the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program ... Basically, the goal is to get immigrant youth across the country who can't make it to D.C....

Sociology, anthropology, and history have been making large inroads into the debate on immigration... This makes one doubt that hostility to mass immigration is simply a protest against job losses, depressed wages, and growing inequality ... Immigration thus enables a larger population to enjoy the same standard of living as the smaller population did before – a clear improvement in total welfare....

The $1.6 billion would be used to build additional physical barriers in the Rio Grande Valley of south Texas, the border's busiest sector for illegal immigration...President Trump has ordered DHS to put 5,000 additional agents along the border, despite latest immigration statistics showing that arrests of illegal migrants are at their lowest point since 1971....

The list includes 1,830 students who are immigrants, meaning they were born in a foreign country and have been in the United States for less than two years ... To help the immigrants, and other students, Dearborn is requiring more of its newly hired teachers to have or to promise to get certification to teach English as a second language, Aldubaily said....

In his Sunday, Dec. 10, letter ("A rambling commentary about population"), Mr. Quinn asks whether there are too many people in our valley, in Colorado and in the world. The implication is that we should consider doing something about it. Therein lies the problem. As noted in Mr ...Yes, immigration policy will impact population in this country. (Contrary to his assertion, Democrats don't necessarily want more immigration ... Eagle. ....